Abstract
Lived experience remains a key concept in qualitative social science research. The study
of life-as-experienced is, however, a project that is methodologically problematic due to the fact that
researchers can only come to grips with people's lived experiences through their (re)constructed
representations of it. Yet, during this process of (re)constructing, some of the complexity of life-asexperienced
is inevitably lost. The methodological challenge is to find an approach that embraces,
rather than reduces the complexity of life-as experienced. In qualitative research literature,
methodological bricolage has been proposed as such an approach. In this article, we present a
concrete example of a bricolaged research approach, provide insights into its potential value and
reflect on the challenges we encountered. We discuss how our approach enabled a multi-layered
exploration of lived experiences. By creatively blending methods, we were able to tap into different
kinds of understanding. Our bricolaged research approach generated: 1. knowledge "from within"
and "in-between" research subjects, 2. a kaleidoscopic view of lived experiences, and 3. a
processual understanding that embraces the temporal dimension of life-as-experienced.
Researchers can benefit from our discussion on this bricolaged approach as there are as of yet few
concrete examples of how bricolage can be implemented in practice.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 16 |
Pages (from-to) | 330-352 |
Number of pages | 23 |
Journal | Forum Qualitative Socialforschung |
Volume | 20 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
Research programs
- ESSB PA